| Literature DB >> 26914748 |
Tian Wang1,2, Jonathon R Ball3, Mattew H Pelletier4, William R Walsh5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Laboratory spinal biomechanical tests using human cadaveric or animal spines have limitations in terms of disease transmission, high sample variability, decay and fatigue during extended testing protocols. Therefore, a synthetic biomimetic spine model may be an acceptable substitute. The goal of current study is to evaluate the properties of a synthetic biomimetic spine model; also to assess the mechanical performance of lateral plating following lateral interbody fusion.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior plate; Biomechanical; Fatigue; Interbody cage; Lateral plate; Lumbar; Motion segment; Pure moment; Sawbones; Sowbones; Synthetic
Year: 2014 PMID: 26914748 PMCID: PMC4648844 DOI: 10.1186/s40634-014-0003-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Orthop ISSN: 2197-1153
Figure 1Anterior view photo, anterior view x-ray and lateral view x-ray imaging of different sample conditions.
Anatomical comparison between synthetic model, human cadaver and sheep; (l) indicates inferior or caudal level; number in brackets indicated the standard deviation
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| End plate depth(l) | 35.48 (0.46) | 34.80 (1.24) | 20.00 (0.60) | 37.09 (1.05) | 33.90 (0.85) | 20.10 (0.70) |
| End plate width(l) | 49.85 (0.76) | 48.00 (1.24) | 29.80 (1.30) | 52.36 (0.61) | 49.50 (1.38) | 31.00 (0.60) |
| Vertebral body height | 26.76 (0.03) | 23.80 (1.10) | 40.20 (1.20) | 23.96 (0.86) | 24.10 (1.10) | 41.10 (0.80) |
| Spinal canal depth | 20.62 (0.19) | 17.50 (0.53) | 8.60 (0.70) | 21.38 (0.45) | 18.60 (0.71) | 8.80 (0.40) |
| Spinal canal width | 23.53 (0.80) | 24.30 (0.64) | 12.60 (1.10) | 23.37 (1.05) | 25.40 (0.49) | 12.90 (1.10) |
| Pedicle height | 13.93 (0.90) | 14.40 (0.62) | 35.70 (1.40) | 16.49 (0.44) | 15.40 (0.46) | 36.30 (1.40) |
| Pedicle width | 12.88 (0.85) | 10.20 (0.60) | 9.50 (0.90) | 11.49 (0.27) | 14.10 (0.46) | 9.60 (1.00) |
Figure 2Individual sample ROM results against cycle number. Note the overall logarithm change occurring in relation to cycle number. S1-Sample 1, S2-Sample 2, S3-Sample 3; angle is represented on the Y-axis. FE-flexion/extension; LB-lateral bending; AR-axial rotation.
Figure 3ROM comparison between 4 cycles, 10 K cycles and recovery. FE-flexion/extension; LB-lateral bending; AR-axial rotation.
10 Nm ROM and NZ results comparing with human cadaveric data
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| FE | 22.9 | 15.7 | 12.8 | 15.0 (7.0) | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.9 | 0.7 (0.6) |
| LB | 18.4 | 12.7 | 11.7 | 16.0 (8.0) | 2.3 | 1.1 | 1.0 | 0.9 (0.8) |
| AR | 8.0 | 5.1 | 4.8 | 5.2 (2.0) | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 1.3 (0.4) |
S1-Sample 1, S2-Sample 2, S3-Sample, number in brackets indicated the standard deviation.
Figure 4ROM comparison between intact (INT), lateral interbody cage alone (LIC), lateral interbody cage + plate (LICP), and anterior interbody cage + plate (AICP) group. ▼ = p < 0.01; * = p < 0.05.FE-flexion/extension; LB-lateral bending; AR-axial rotation.
Comparison of the current study results with relevant studies
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| Current study | ±10 | Lateral cage alone | 48.5% | 31.4% | 81.3% |
| Lateral cage and plate | 22.2% | 11.9% | 33.9% | ||
| Cappuccino et al., 2010 [ | ±7.5 | XLIF cage alone | 31.6% | 32.5% | 69.4% |
| XLIF + lateral plate | 32.5% | 15.9% | 53.4% | ||
| Bess et al., 2008 [ | ±5 | XLIF cage alone | 45.8% | 41.8% | 66.3% |
| XLIF + lateral plate | 40.0% | 24.2% | 50.7% | ||
| Le Huec et al., 2002 [ | ±7 | LLIF cage alone | 71.3% | 88.5% | 107.7% |
| LLIF cage + lateral plate | 40.3% | 27.3% | 45.2% | ||
| Kim et al., 2005 [ | ±7.5 | LLIF graft alone | 75.2% | 96.9% | 71.6% |
| LLIF + lateral plate | 52.1% | 37.9% | 41.3% |
XLIF-eXtreme Lateral Interbody Fusion; LLIF – Lateral Lumbar Interbody Fusion.